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S5E1: Finding Strength in Diverse Scientific Communities

S5E1: Finding Strength in Diverse Scientific Communities

Released Tuesday, 26th January 2021
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S5E1: Finding Strength in Diverse Scientific Communities

S5E1: Finding Strength in Diverse Scientific Communities

S5E1: Finding Strength in Diverse Scientific Communities

S5E1: Finding Strength in Diverse Scientific Communities

Tuesday, 26th January 2021
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This week’s Taproot podcast episode is a conversation with Dr. Tanisha Williams A plant researcher, she was inspired this summer by the simultaneous rise of the pandemic and the civil uprising against police brutality to draw Black botanists together for a social media event called #BlackBotanistsWeek. Tanisha is an impressively accomplished early career researcher whose work has ranged from population genomics to the use of herbarium specimens to track climate induced changes in flowering phenology, all with a central thread of preserving plant diversity. She received her PhD from the University of Connecticut Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology and now she is the David Burpee Postdoctoral Fellow in the Conservation, Genetics, and Ecology & Evolution of Plant Reproduction Group at Bucknell University. Currently, Tanisha works with Dr. Chris Martine on rare Pennsylvanian plant conservation, Australian Solanum taxonomy, and the way the Martu people of Australia interact with plants.

Tanisha takes us on an inspiring journey through her research projects. She has persevered despite numerous setbacks, including those we are all familiar with like the pandemic, and those that are more specific to her experience, such as the dangers of spending time in nature while black and the lack of BIPOC representation in academia. Her social media campaign to provide black plant-lovers with a space to connect and share experiences quickly went viral when it first launched in July and has since expanded into a free virtual lecture series to highlight the work of black botanists. The series is called “Growing Black Roots: The Black Botanical Legacy,” and is hosted virtually by the Holden Arboretum every second Wednesday until September 2021.

A transcript for this episode was generously provided by Jo Stormer http://bit.ly/TaprootS5E1_Transcript

Tanisha’s website: https://naturesplasticity.weebly.com/research.html

@t_marie_wms Tanisha’s Instagram and Twitter

Beronda’s website and blog: http://www.berondamontgomery.com/reflect/my-black-botanical-legacy/

@BerondaM Beronda’s Twitter

@ehaswell Elizabeth’s Twitter

@baxtertwi Ivan’s Twitter

@taprootpodcast Taproot Twitter

Link to Holden Arboretum Black Botanists Lecture Series https://holdenarb.org/visit/events-lectures/scientist-lecture/

Join the Black Botanist’s Week community:#BlackBotanistsWeekhttps://blackbotanistsweek.weebly.com/

A story on Dr. Tiffany Knight’s work: https://source.wustl.edu/2013/02/walking-in-the-footsteps-of-19th-and-20thcentury-naturalists-scientists-find-battered-plantpollinator-network/

Burkle, L.A., Marlin, J.C. and T.M. Knight. 2013. Plant-Pollinator Interactions over 120 Years: Loss of Species, Co-Occurrence and Function. Science 339: 1611-1615.

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